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			276 lines
		
	
	
		
			12 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
@section Cygwin API Questions
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@subsection How does everything work?
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There's a C library which provides a Unix-style API.  The
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applications are linked with it and voila - they run on Windows.
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The aim is to add all the goop necessary to make your apps run on
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Windows into the C library.  Then your apps should run on Unix and
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Windows with no changes at the source level.
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The C library is in a DLL, which makes basic applications quite small.
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And it allows relatively easy upgrades to the Win32/Unix translation
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layer, providing that dll changes stay backward-compatible.
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For a good overview of Cygwin, you may want to read the paper on Cygwin
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published by the Usenix Association in conjunction with the 2d Usenix NT
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Symposium in August 1998.  It is available in html format on the project
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WWW site.
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@subsection Are development snapshots for the Cygwin library available?
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Yes.  They're made whenever anything interesting happens inside the
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Cygwin library (usually roughly on a nightly basis, depending on how much
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is going on).  They are only intended for those people who wish to
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contribute code to the project.  If you aren't going to be happy
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debugging problems in a buggy snapshot, avoid these and wait for a real
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release.  The snapshots are available from
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http://cygwin.com/snapshots/
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@subsection How is the DOS/Unix CR/LF thing handled?
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@strong{(Please note: This section has not yet been updated for the latest
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net release.)}
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Let's start with some background.
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In UNIX, a file is a file and what the file contains is whatever the
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program/programmer/user told it to put into it.  In Windows, a file is
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also a file and what the file contains depends not only on the
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program/programmer/user but also the file processing mode.
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When processing in text mode, certain values of data are treated
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specially.  A \n (new line) written to the file will prepend a \r
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(carriage return) so that if you `printf("Hello\n") you in fact get
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"Hello\r\n".  Upon reading this combination, the \r is removed and the
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number of bytes returned by the read is 1 less than was actually read.
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This tends to confuse programs dependant on ftell() and fseek().  A
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Ctrl-Z encountered while reading a file sets the End Of File flags even
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though it truly isn't the end of file.
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One of Cygwin's goals is to make it possible to easily mix Cygwin-ported
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Unix programs with generic Windows programs.  As a result, Cygwin opens
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files in text mode as is normal under Windows.  In the accompanying
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tools, tools that deal with binaries (e.g. objdump) operate in unix
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binary mode and tools that deal with text files (e.g. bash) operate in
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text mode.
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Some people push the notion of globally setting the default processing
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mode to binary via mount point options or by setting the CYGWIN32
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environment variable.  But that creates a different problem.  In
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binary mode, the program receives all of the data in the file, including
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a \r.  Since the programs will no longer deal with these properly for
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you, you would have to remove the \r from the relevant text files,
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especially scripts and startup resource files.  This is a porter "cop
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out", forcing the user to deal with the \r for the porter.
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It is rather easy for the porter to fix the source code by supplying the
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appropriate file processing mode switches to the open/fopen functions.
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Treat all text files as text and treat all binary files as binary.
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To be specific, you can select binary mode by adding @code{O_BINARY} to
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the second argument of an @code{open} call, or @code{"b"} to second
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argument of an @code{fopen} call.  You can also call @code{setmode (fd,
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O_BINARY)}.
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Note that because the open/fopen switches are defined by ANSI, they
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exist under most flavors of Unix; open/fopen will just ignore the switch
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since they have no meaning to UNIX.
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Also note that @code{lseek} only works in binary mode.
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Explanation adapted from mailing list email by Earnie Boyd
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<earnie_boyd@@yahoo.com>.
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@subsection Is the Cygwin library multi-thread-safe?
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Multi-thread-safe support is turned on by default in 1.1.x releases
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(i.e., in the latest net release).  That does not mean that it is bug
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free!
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There is also limited support for 'POSIX threads', see the file
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@code{cygwin.din} for the list of POSIX thread functions provided.
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@subsection Why is some functionality only supported in Windows NT?
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Windows 9x: n.
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32 bit extensions and a graphical shell for a 16 bit patch to an
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8 bit operating system originally coded for a 4 bit microprocessor,
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written by a 2 bit company that can't stand 1 bit of competition.
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But seriously, Windows 9x lacks most of the security-related calls and
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has several other deficiencies with respect to its version of the Win32
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API.  See the calls.texinfo document for more information as to what
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is not supported in Win 9x.
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@subsection How is fork() implemented?
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Cygwin fork() essentially works like a non-copy on write version
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of fork() (like old Unix versions used to do).  Because of this it
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can be a little slow.  In most cases, you are better off using the
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spawn family of calls if possible.
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Here's how it works:
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Parent initializes a space in the Cygwin process table for child.
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Parent creates child suspended using Win32 CreateProcess call, giving
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the same path it was invoked with itself.  Parent calls setjmp to save
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its own context and then sets a pointer to this in the Cygwin shared
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memory area (shared among all Cygwin tasks).  Parent fills in the childs
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.data and .bss subsections by copying from its own address space into
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the suspended child's address space.  Parent then starts the child.
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Parent waits on mutex for child to get to safe point.  Child starts and
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discovers if has been forked and then longjumps using the saved jump
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buffer.  Child sets mutex parent is waiting on and then blocks on
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another mutex waiting for parent to fill in its stack and heap.  Parent
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notices child is in safe area, copies stack and heap from itself into
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child, releases the mutex the child is waiting on and returns from the
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fork call.  Child wakes from blocking on mutex, recreates any mmapped
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areas passed to it via shared area and then returns from fork itself.
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@subsection How does wildcarding (globbing) work?
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If the DLL thinks it was invoked from a DOS style prompt, it runs a
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`globber' over the arguments provided on the command line.  This means
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that if you type @code{LS *.EXE} from DOS, it will do what you might
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expect.
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Beware: globbing uses @code{malloc}.  If your application defines
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@code{malloc}, that will get used.  This may do horrible things to you.
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@subsection How do symbolic links work?
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Cygwin generates link files with a magic header.  When
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you open a file or directory that is a link to somewhere else, it
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opens the file or directory listed in the magic header.  Because we
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don't want to have to open every referenced file to check symlink
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status, Cygwin marks symlinks with the system attribute.  Files
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without the system attribute are not checked.  Because remote samba
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filesystems do not enable the system attribute by default, symlinks do
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not work on network drives unless you explicitly enable this
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attribute.
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@subsection Why do some files, which are not executables have the 'x' type.
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When working out the unix-style attribute bits on a file, the library
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has to fill out some information not provided by the WIN32 API.  
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It guesses that files ending in .exe and .bat are executable, as are
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ones which have a "#!" as their first characters.
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@subsection How secure is Cygwin in a multi-user environment?
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Cygwin is not secure in a multi-user environment.  For
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example if you have a long running daemon such as "inetd"
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running as admin while ordinary users are logged in, or if
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you have a user logged in remotely while another user is logged
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into the console, one cygwin client can trick another into
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running code for it.  In this way one user may gain the
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priveledge of another cygwin program running on the machine.
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This is because cygwin has shared state that is accessible by 
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all processes.
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(Thanks to Tim Newsham (newsham@@lava.net) for this explanation).
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@subsection How do the net-related functions work?
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@strong{(Please note: This section has not yet been updated for the latest
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net release.)}
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The network support in Cygwin is supposed to provide the Unix API, not
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the Winsock API.
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There are differences between the semantics of functions with the same
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name under the API.
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E.g., the select system call on Unix can wait on a standard file handles
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and handles to sockets.  The select call in winsock can only wait on
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sockets.  Because of this, cygwin.dll does a lot of nasty stuff behind
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the scenes, trying to persuade various winsock/win32 functions to do what
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a Unix select would do.
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If you are porting an application which already uses Winsock, then
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using the net support in Cygwin is wrong.
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But you can still use native Winsock, and use Cygwin.  The functions
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which cygwin.dll exports are called 'cygwin_<name>'.  There
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are a load of defines which map the standard Unix names to the names
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exported by the dll -- check out include/netdb.h:
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@example
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..etc..
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void		cygwin_setprotoent (int);
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void		cygwin_setservent (int);
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void		cygwin_setrpcent (int);
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..etc..
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#ifndef __INSIDE_CYGWIN_NET__
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#define endprotoent cygwin_endprotoent 
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#define endservent cygwin_endservent 
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#define endrpcent  cygwin_endrpcent  
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..etc..
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@end example
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The idea is that you'll get the Unix->Cygwin mapping if you include
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the standard Unix header files.  If you use this, you won't need to
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link with libwinsock.a - all the net stuff is inside the dll.
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The mywinsock.h file is a standard winsock.h which has been hacked to
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remove the bits which conflict with the standard Unix API, or are
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defined in other headers.  E.g., in mywinsock.h, the definition of
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struct hostent is removed.  This is because on a Unix box, it lives in
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netdb.  It isn't a good idea to use it in your applications.
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As of the b19 release, this information may be slightly out of date.
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@subsection I don't want Unix sockets, how do I use normal Win32 winsock?
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@strong{(Please note: This section has not yet been updated for the latest
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net release.)}
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To use the vanilla Win32 winsock, you just need to #define Win32_Winsock
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and #include "windows.h" at the top of your source file(s).  You'll also
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want to add -lwsock32 to the compiler's command line so you link against
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libwsock32.a.
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@subsection What version numbers are associated with Cygwin?
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@strong{(Please note: This section has not yet been updated for the latest
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net release.)}
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There is a cygwin.dll major version number that gets incremented
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every time we make a new Cygwin release available.  This
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corresponds to the name of the release (e.g. beta 19's major
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number is "19").  There is also a cygwin.dll minor version number.  If
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we release an update of the library for an existing release, the minor
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number would be incremented.
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There are also Cygwin API major and minor numbers.  The major number
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tracks important non-backward-compatible interface changes to the API.
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An executable linked with an earlier major number will not be compatible
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with the latest DLL.  The minor number tracks significant API additions
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or changes that will not break older executables but may be required by
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newly compiled ones.
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Then there is a shared memory region compatibity version number.  It is
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incremented when incompatible changes are made to the shared memory
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region or to any named shared mutexes, semaphores, etc.
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Finally there is a mount point registry version number which keeps track
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of non-backwards-compatible changes to the registry mount table layout.
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This has been "B15.0" since the beta 15 release.
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@subsection Why isn't _timezone set correctly?
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@strong{(Please note: This section has not yet been updated for the latest
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net release.)}
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Did you explicitly call tzset() before checking the value of _timezone?
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If not, you must do so.
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@subsection Is there a mouse interface?
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There is no way to capture mouse events from Cygwin.  There are
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currently no plans to add support for this.
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